NGO

GER→ENG: Press Release for Survival International

Lack of attention to detail can become political. In the fight for indigenous peoples’ rights, the semantics of identity are at the very heart of the issue. Sensibilities constantly change so you better not get it wrong!

My Translation

Only four members of the UN voted against the Declaration on Indigenous Rights in 2007: Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the USA. Three are members of the Commonwealth.

Of the 53 countries which now make up the Commonwealth, only two of the smallest (Dominica and Fiji) have ratified the 1989 international lawrecognising indigenous and tribal peoples’ rights.

The UK refuses to recognise this law, claiming it is because there are no indigenous peoples there, but that has not stopped countries such as the Netherlands from signing. One hundred and fifty-eight members of parliament have rejected the UK government’s argument and asked it to sign the law, all to no avail.

Stephen Corry said today, ‘The Commonwealth was partly built on the dispossession of indigenous peoples. It’s time for it to catch up with the rest of the world which is finally recognising their rights. For a family of nations which claims to put human rights at the top of its agenda, it is failing, utterly and shamefully.’